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      Primary reconstruction is a good option in the treatment of urinary fistula after kidney transplantation

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          Abstract

          OBJECTIVES: urinary fistula is a morbid complication after renal transplantation leading to graft losses and patient death. We review and update our data on urinary fistula after renal transplantation and the outcome after surgical and conservative management. MATERIALS AND METHODS: the charts of 1046 renal transplants were reviewed. Transplants were performed through an extended inguinotomy; vascular anastomoses to the iliac vessels and urinary reconstruction accomplished through the Gregoir technique. Fistulae were diagnosed by urinary leaks through the incision or by the occurrence of a collection in the iliac fossa. Patient was treated surgically or conservatively according to the characteristics of the fistula and patient clinical status. RESULTS: Thirty one fistulae were diagnosed (2.9%). Twenty nine leaks due to ureteral necrosis and 2 due to reimplantation fault. The incidence of leaks among cadaver and live donor transplants was 3.22% and 2.63%, respectively (p = 0.73). Among diabetic and non diabetic patients the incidence of urinary leaks was 6.4% and 2.6%, respectively (p = 0.049). Treatment consisted in anastomosis of the graft ureter or pelvis with the ureter of the recipient in 17 cases with success in 13 (76.5%). Prolonged bladder drainage was employed in 7 cases and the fistula healed in 4 (57%). Ureteral reimplantation was performed in 3 cases and did not work in any of them. Ureteral ligature plus nephrostomy was employed in two cases and worked in one (50%). Percutaneous nephrostomy and ureteral stenting with double J catheter were employed in one case each and worked in both. CONCLUSIONS: The anastomosis of the graft ureter with the ureter of the recipient is a good method for treating urinary fistulae after renal transplantation when local and systemic conditions are good. Ureteral ligature associated to nephrostomy should be applied in cases of unfavorable local conditions or clinically unstable patients.

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          The urological complications of renal transplantation: a series of 1535 patients.

          To determine the incidence of urological complications of renal transplantation at one institution, and relate this to donor and recipient factors. A consecutive series of 1535 renal transplants were audited, and a database of donor and recipient characteristics created for risk-factor analysis. An unstented Leadbetter-Politano anastomosis was the preferred method of ureteric reimplantation. There were 45 urinary leaks, 54 primary ureteric obstructions, nine cases of ureteric calculi, three bladder stones and 19 cases of bladder outlet obstruction at some time after transplantation. The overall incidence of urological complications was 9.2%, with that for urinary leak or primary ureteric obstruction being 6.5%. One graft was lost because of complications, and there were three deaths associated directly or indirectly with urological complications. There was no association with recipient age, cadaveric vs living-donor transplants, or cold ischaemic times before organ reimplantation, although the donor age was slightly higher in cases of urinary leak. There was no association with kidneys imported via the UK national organ-sharing scheme vs the use of local kidneys. The management of these complications is discussed. The incidence of urological complications in this series has remained essentially unchanged for 20 years. The causes of these complications and techniques for their prevention are discussed.
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            Urological complications in 1,000 consecutive renal transplant recipients.

            The urological complications in the first consecutive 1,000 renal transplants at our transplant center are reported with a minimum followup of 12 months. The kidney was implanted in the iliac fossa in all cases and in all but 3 the ureter was inserted into the bladder with a Politano-Leadbetter technique. Overall, there were 71 primary complications in 68 patients (7.1%), which included 36 ureteral obstructions, 25 ureteral or bladder leaks (including ureteral necrosis), 7 bladder outflow obstructions, 2 ureteral stones and 1 case of symptomatic vesicoureteral reflux. The use of high dose steroids in the early years was associated with a 10% urological complication rate, which decreased to 4% in patients receiving low dose steroids thereafter combined with azathioprine or cyclosporine. The urological complication was corrected after 1 procedure in 65 cases and after 2 procedures in 4. No grafts were lost due to urological complications. Two patients died, 1 of sepsis following transurethral resection of the prostate and subsequent ureteral necrosis, and 1 of hemorrhage following nephrostomy tube insertion. Most ureteral complications were treated by an open operation, although in recent years endoscopic techniques have become more common. Meticulous retrieval technique, low dose steroid protocols and rapid diagnosis are the crucial factors associated with a minimal incidence of urological complications after renal transplantation.
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              Is routine ureteric stenting needed in kidney transplantation? A randomized trial.

              Whether routine ureteric stenting in low-urological-risk patients reduces the risk of urological complications in kidney transplantation is not established. Eligible patients were recipients of single-organ renal transplants with normal lower urinary tracts. Patients were randomized intraoperatively to receive either routine stenting or stenting only in the event of technical difficulties with the anastomosis. All patients underwent Lich-Gregoire ureteroneocystostomy. Between June 1994 and December 1997, 331 kidney transplants were performed at a single center, 305 patients were eligible, and 280 patients were enrolled and randomized. Donor and recipient age, sex, donor source, whether first or subsequent grafts, ureteric length, native renal disease, and immunosuppression were similar in each group. In the no-routine-stenting group 6 of 137 patients (4.4%) received stents after randomization for intraoperative events that in the surgeon's opinion required use of a stent. In an intention-to-treat analysis there was no difference between groups in the primary outcome cluster of obstruction or leak [routine stenting 5 of 143 (3.5%) vs. no routine stenting 9 of 137 (6.6%); P=0.23], or in either of these complications analyzed separately. All urological complications were successfully managed without major morbidity. Living donor organs and shorter ureteric length (after trimming) were univariate risk factors for leaks, although increasing donor age was associated with obstruction. Routine ureteric stenting is unnecessary in kidney transplantation in patients at low risk for urological complications. Careful surgical technique with selective stenting of problematic anastomoses yields similar results.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                ibju
                International braz j urol
                Int. braz j urol.
                Sociedade Brasileira de Urologia (Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil )
                1677-5538
                1677-6119
                August 2006
                : 32
                : 4
                : 398-404
                Affiliations
                [01] SP orgnameUniversity of Sao Paulo orgdiv1Medical School orgdiv2General Hospital Brazil
                Article
                S1677-55382006000400003 S1677-5538(06)03200403
                10.1590/S1677-55382006000400003
                dc4dd9c1-9127-4b5b-93e7-dd372545c6df

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 13, Pages: 7
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                SciELO Brazil

                Categories
                Clinical Urology

                treatment outcome,renal transplantation,urinary fistula

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